caseyweederman @ caseyweederman @lemmy.ca Posts 5Comments 2,337Joined 2 yr. ago
That is my personal preference, yes. But LMDE is the perfect overlap of "just use Mint" and "don't use Ubuntu".
It doesn't. It has a feature that hides the HUD.
Ctrl-F3 switches to the third virtual desktop in KDE if you have at least three virtual desktops. If you don't have at least three virtual desktops, it doesn't do anything, but also prevents the input from reaching Valheim to turn off the HUD.
The key part is "disable the HUD"
Dwarf Fortress is its own boss key.
That is handy, but I think OP was looking for an in-game function to turn off health bars and quest indicators prior to taking a screenshot.
That probably is the same as on Windows, but OP's shell was intercepting it as instructions for the desktop and not passing it into the application itself.
I think Alt+F3 is the shortcut for "exit fullscreen" for native KDE applications.
🥰 Thank you
I'm not a real doctor but I am a real man
Too many pins for that. Those would all only require two.
You directly replied to someone talking about LMDE.
https://sh.itjust.works/comment/18357337
I appreciate you sharing the link, but it's too late
Tony
Presumably this will eventually stop being funny to me.
But it's too late, the habit is formed.
Linux Mint Debian Edition, the current subject of discussion, is not.
Three-quarters-baked then.
I upvoted you for conversation, but I wholeheartedly disagree with you. Chrono Cross is the perfect sequel, first and foremost because it wasn't a recolor of Chrono Trigger.
And if you say it doesn't have anything to do with Chico l Chrono Trigger, I'm going to say with confidence that you didn't play it.
Ubuntu is based on Debian though, not the other way around.
Agreed. And Canonical routinely tries to sneak snaps back in, to the point where the official Firefox instructions include instructions for pinning their deb repo above the Ubuntu one:
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/install-firefox-linux#w_install-firefox-deb-package-for-debian-based-distributions-recommended
(see step 5)
Whoauuaauuaauuaauu
The law of the prophets was a costly covenant between old-testament god and humanity. Or, you know, whatever subgroup was in charge of translations at the time.
The "fulfillment" mentioned is a single lump sum of holy lamb blood in place of the never-actually-complete exchange of not wearing blended fabrics, not getting tattoos, and sacrificing your firstborn on a rock in the mountains. And slaughtering prisoners of war who you tricked into getting circumcised as a condition of their surrender so that they would be vulnerable.